The Federal Philosophy.

Why we are moving from monolithic servers to a segmented, sovereign federation.

The Problem: The Fragile Monolith

In traditional self-hosting, personal data (photos, finances) often lives on the same server as public services (websites, chat). If the public service crashes or is compromised, the private data goes down with it.

Opplet solves this by enforcing a Federal Separation between the "State" (Public Infrastructure) and the "Citizen" (Private Data).

The "Facility vs. Car" Analogy

Opplet treats the infrastructure like a secure parking facility. You need a key card (SSO) to enter the building. But once you enter your private room (The Bunker) or your personal vehicle (VM), you are the sovereign owner. The facility manager has no keys to your car.

Sovereignty First

Zone 1 (The Bunker) is designed to survive a total collapse of the corporate structure. It uses local authentication and physically separate hardware. If the business fails, the owner's digital life remains uninterrupted.

Liability Isolation

By strictly segmenting the "Academy" (Zone 4) from the "Private Suite" (Zone 1), we can offer learners root access and risky simulation tools without exposing the host's personal assets to liability or security breaches.